Source
Department of Internal Medicine II, Saarland University Hospital Homburg, Homburg, Germany.
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
In patients with steroid-refractory Crohn's disease, the therapeutic goal is to achieve both rapid remission and maintenance of clinical response.
AIM:
To evaluate the long-term benefit in patients treated with cyclophosphamide pulse therapy and azathioprine or methotrexate, a combination shown to be effective in a recent pilot study.
METHODS:
Sixteen patients with acute steroid-refractory Crohn's disease participated in a prospective open-labelled uncontrolled pilot study between December 1998 and June 2003. All had a median number of 4 monthly pulses of intravenous cyclophosphamide (750 mg) and were followed until relapse of the disease.
RESULTS:
Thirteen of 16 patients (81%) achieved remission within 8 weeks after two pulses of cyclophosphamide in combination with azathioprine or methotrexate, with a Crohn's Disease Activity Index decrease from 294 to 111 (median). Remission sustained for 19 months (median, range: 1-45). Moreover, eight patients with pyoderma gangrenosum and erythema nodosum who responded to cyclophosphamide have maintained their remission for up to 30 months.
CONCLUSIONS:
In steroid refractory patients with Crohn's disease, cyclophosphamide is highly effective to induce remission. This uncontrolled study indicates that cyclophosphamide-induced remission is long-lasting under standard immunosuppressive therapy.